Williams-Sonoma (WSM) 10-K Summary — Year Ended Feb 1, 2026
Williams-Sonoma, Inc. is a retailer of home furnishings and kitchen products, as indicated by the risk factors section. The filing reports a slight revenue increase in the most recent period after prior declines, with positive operating income and cash flow.
Key takeaway
Year ended Feb 1, 2026 · FY2025 10-K
Williams-Sonoma, Inc. is a retailer of home furnishings and kitchen products, as indicated by the risk factors section. The filing reports a slight revenue increase in the most recent period after prior declines, with positive operating income and cash flow.
Financial snapshot
Selected annual figures reported with the filing, shown separately from the narrative summary.
Annual revenue
$7.8B
Revenue reported for the fiscal year.
Operating income
$1.4B
Income from operations reported for the year.
Net income
$1.1B
Net income reported for the year.
Operating cash flow
$1.3B
Cash generated by operating activities.
Annual revenue trend
Reported annual revenue and its change from the preceding fiscal year.
| Period ended | Revenue | Year-over-year change |
|---|---|---|
| Jan 29, 2023 | $8.7B | +5.2% |
| Jan 28, 2024 | $7.8B | -10.6% |
| Feb 2, 2025 | $7.7B | -0.5% |
| Feb 1, 2026 | $7.8B | +1.2% |
Business overview
The company's business involves the sale of home furnishings and kitchen products, as referenced in the risk factors discussion. The filing's Business overview section is listed but its detailed content is not provided in the supplied data.
Financial performance
Revenue declined from a prior peak and then stabilized, with a modest increase in the most recent period. The company reported operating income and net income, and generated positive operating cash flow.
Material risks
Material risks include a decline in consumer spending on home furnishings and kitchen products, unsuccessful management of operating costs, and potential impairment of long-lived assets. Additional risks involve the inability to obtain acceptable insurance, failure to meet financial guidance, and inability to pay dividends or repurchase stock at intended levels.
Liquidity and capital
The company's operating cash flow supports its capital allocation, which includes dividends and share repurchases, as indicated by the risk factors discussing the potential harm if these are not maintained.
What to watch
Monitor the revenue trend, as it has shown volatility in recent periods.